Inclusion, reporting and analysis of demographic variables in chronobiology and sleep research

Selma Tir, Rhiannon White, Manuel Spitschan

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Many aspects of sleep and circadian physiology are sensitive to participant-level characteristics. While recent research robustly highlights the importance of considering participant-level demographic information, the extent to which this information is consistently collected, and reported in the literature, remains unclear. This article investigates study sample characteristics within the published sleep and chronobiology research over the past 40 years. 6,777 articles were identified and a random sample of 20% was included. The reporting of sample size, age, sex, gender, ethnicity, level of education, socio-economic status, and profession of the study population was scored, and any reported aggregate summary statistics for these variables were recorded. We observed a significant upward trend in the reporting and analysis of demographic variables in sleep and chronobiology research. However, we found that while > 90% of studies reported age or sex, all other variables were reported in < 25% of cases. Reporting quality was highly variable, indicating an opportunity to standardize reporting guidelines for participant-level characteristics to facilitate Meta analyses.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1421026
JournalFrontiers in Neuroscience
Volume18
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Keywords

  • chronobiology
  • circadian rhythms
  • demographics
  • diversity
  • inclusion
  • reporting
  • sleep

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